Allison v. Allison

864 A.2d 191, 160 Md. App. 331
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 7, 2005
Docket207, September Term, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 864 A.2d 191 (Allison v. Allison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Allison, 864 A.2d 191, 160 Md. App. 331 (Md. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

SALMON, Judge.

The appellant in this matter is Michael Allison (“Michael”), who was born on May 28, 1958. Appellee, Carol Ann Allison (“Carol Ann”), is twenty years older than Michael. After a marriage of approximately fifteen years, the two were divorced by the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. At the time of the divorce, Michael was forty-four and Carol Ann was sixty-four. The circuit court awarded Carol Ann $2,300 per month in indefinite alimony and a monetary award in the amount of $17,500. 1 Additionally, the court ordered that

either Twenty-one Thousand Four Hundred Fifty Dollars and eighteen cents ($21,450.18) or the current balance of ... [Michael’s] 401 (k) account, whichever is the lesser amount, shall be transferred from ... [Michael’s] 401(k) to a pension retirement, profit sharing or deferred compensation plan in ... [Carol Ann’s] name and this shall be accomplished through the entry of a qualified domestic relations order, which shall be submitted to the court by ... [Carol Ann’s] attorney after reviewed by ... [Michael’s] attorney.

Michael presents three questions in this appeal, viz:

I. Did the trial judge err in finding that appellant dissipated assets when he used the money he borrowed from his 401 (k) plan to make payments toward the parties’ attorney fees?

II. Did the trial judge err by including the amount of appellant’s unpaid loan twice in calculating the value of his 401(k) plan and finding appellee’s marital share of the 401(k) plan was $21,450.18?

III. Should the alimony award be reversed where neither the trial court’s ruling nor the record indicate how the *334 trial judge exercised her discretion in determining the amount of the indefinite alimony award?

Carol Ann filed a cross-appeal, in which she raised two additional questions, which we have reordered:

IV. Does a reversal and remand on the issue of a monetary award automatically trigger a reversal on the issue of alimony?

V. Can a trial court award “the lesser of’ two sums in a division of assets to be implemented by a Qualified Domestic Relations Order?

BACKGROUND

The parties were married in October 1988 and separated about ten years later, on June 28, 1998. Constant “bickering” was the problem in the marriage that ultimately caused the parties to separate. Almost five years passed between the date of separation and April 7, 2003, the date an amended judgment of divorce was entered.

Carol Ann suffers from fibromyalgia, bone density loss, late-onset asthma, and migraine headaches. Additionally, Carol Ann was in a car accident more than twenty years ago, which caused her to undergo a cervical fusion. The sequela of that fusion have caused Carol Ann to have recurring neck problems.

Michael has no health problems that interfere with his ability to work and carry on normal activities. He has been employed since 1988 by the Chesapeake Publishing Corporation. Presently, Michael is the general manager of the Easton Printing Division of Chesapeake Publishing. His gross salary is $83,600 annually or $6,966.67 monthly. After deductions, he nets $4,911.09 per month. As a fringe benefit, Michael’s employer expends $416 per month to lease a car for his use.

Carol Ann is unemployed. Prior to her marriage to Michael, she worked as a secretary. She last looked for work in 1998 — the year the parties separated. During the period of separation, she has tried volunteer work, but, according to her *335 testimony, the activity caused her pain and made it impossible to do the assigned work. For that reason she has not sought employment since 1998.

Carol Ann worked for nine months at a floor store in Cambridge, making $100 per week in 1992 or 1993. In 1996-1997, for a period of about eighteen months, she drove a school bus, transporting Head Start students for the Talbot County School Board. She earned approximately seven dollars per hour as a bus driver ($14,500 yearly) but was terminated from that job because she had had too many accidents.

According to Carol Ann, she “would love to work” but cannot due to her many health problems. In 2000, at age sixty-two, Carol Ann elected to commence receiving Social Security retirement benefits. Persons who elect to receive benefits at sixty-two receive smaller benefits than those who elect to receive benefits at age sixty-five or later. 2 Her Social Security benefits are currently only $499 per month.

Michael testified at trial that he was not familiar with his wife’s present health problems because, since the separation, he almost never sees her. He believed, however, that Carol Ann was capable of working part-time (twenty-five to thirty hours per week) at one of the senior programs run by WalMart or McDonalds in the local area. Based on his knowledge of the local economy, he opined that Carol Ann could earn between $6.50 and $8 per hour at one of these positions for seniors.

The parties jointly own a house in Denton worth $282,500. They have $147,500 equity in that property. Post-separation, Carol Ann has lived in the Denton residence, but Michael has paid the first mortgage payments on the house in the amount of $1,246 monthly, plus an additional $81 per month owed on a second mortgage secured by the home.

Michael, at the time of trial, lived in a one-bedroom apartment in a private home in Easton. He pays rent of $525 per month for that room.

*336 On January 4, 2002, which was more than three years after the parties separated, Michael borrowed $15,500 from his 401(k) plan. He used $4,000 of those funds to make a court-ordered contribution to Carol Ann’s attorney’s fees; the remainder of the borrowed funds was used to pay his attorney in the subject case. 3 Michael later repaid $1,835 to his 401(k) plan. The unpaid portion is now approximately $13,665. After the loan is deducted from the 401(k)’s value, the plan, as of the October 18, 2002, divorce hearing, had a balance of $15,570.05.

QUESTIONS 1 AND 2

The trial judge ruled that Michael had dissipated $13,665 of marital property when he used that sum to pay attorney’s fees. Michael contends that the trial judge erred in making that ruling. He also contends that the trial judge erred when she concluded that Carol Ann’s fifty percent marital share of the 401(k) plan was worth $21,050.18.

At trial, it was undisputed that the gross balance of the 401 (k) plan was $29,235.05 as of June 30, 2002, and that this latter figure included the unpaid loan balance of $13,665.31. In their briefs, both parties agree that the trial judge erred when she added the gross figure of $29,235.05 to the amount of the loan and divided the sum by two, thereby concluding that Carol Ann’s fifty percent share of the 401 (k) plan was worth $21,450.15. Carol Ann contends that a fifty percent share of the 401 (k) plan should have been valued at fifty percent of $29,235.05 or $14,617.53.

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Bluebook (online)
864 A.2d 191, 160 Md. App. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-allison-mdctspecapp-2005.